UCLA Anderson Forecast: National Outlook Improves as Fed Goes All-In

California continues a slow growth recovery

LOS ANGELES -- In its fourth quarterly report of 2010, the UCLA Anderson Forecast calls for "modest growth and distressingly high unemployment" for most of 2011, with an acceleration of growth late next year that will gradually lower the unemployment rate. The California forecast reads similarly, with slow growth expected until the end of next year. The Los Angeles County projections appear slightly more optimistic as 2010's high unemployment rates begin to gradually descend early next year. All three forecasts are brighter for 2012 as the economies grow more rapidly and unemployment rates continue to drop.

The National ForecastIn a report titled, "Risky Business," UCLA Anderson Forecast Senior Economist David Shulman lays out the Federal Reserve's plan to "expand its balance sheet" by $600 billion over the next eight months through the purchase of intermediate-term bonds in an effort to lower long-term interest rates and thereby stimulate consumption and investment. Shulman believes that this policy will be "modestly helpful," noting that recent economic data have been encouraging. As a result, the Forecast has revised upward both its real Gross Domestic Product (GDP) and inflation forecasts. But, there is a "but." "Unfortunately, even with the jobs gains averaging 150,000 per a month in 2011 and 200,000 a month in 2012," Shulman writes, "unemployment will remain above 9% through the third quarter of 2012."

In his conclusion, Shulman writes that the economy is healing - slowly - and the Forecast calls for more rapid growth late next year. The Forecast report says that inflation will rise faster than the Fed expects, leading to a tightening of monetary policy in early 2012. The Forecast calls for real GDP to grow at a 2% plus annual rate through the third quarter of 2011, then ramp up to a 3% or so growth rate. As for inflation, the Forecast says that it should be "at or above" the Fed's informal 2% target by late next year.

In a companion piece to the national report, UCLA Anderson Forecast Director Edward Leamer delves deeply into national employment issues in an essay titled, "What's the Matter with the U.S. Job Market?" In it, Leamer argues that the national job markets certain structural problems that have created a mismatch between what employers are looking for and what unemployed workers have to offer. These structural issues include the loss of manufacturing jobs to a variety of "competitors" both technological (robots, microprocessors) and human (foreign workers and recent immigrants willing to work for less) and the housing crisis that continues to jeopardize the construction sector. Unlike in previous recessions, Leamer opines, workers today are not easily returning to the jobs they lost and as a result the economy must find a way to create jobs for millions of workers whose skills lend themselves more suitably to manufacturing and construction.

The California ForecastCalifornia's forecast, authored by Senior Economist Jerry Nickelsburg and titled "Laying the Groundwork for California's Economic Recovery," continues themes that began in September - almost imperceptibly slow growth until the end of next year. "with only the first indication of changes in consumer and business expectations revealing themselves in the contemporaneous data, and in the absence of an external driver to induce faster growth, this is the most likely scenario for this phase of the recovery," Nickelsburg writes. Stated bluntly, California must re-employ 1.3 million workers just to get back to pre-recession levels and must also find jobs for all the new entrants to the work force in the past two and a half years.

The forecast's expectations for 2011 are growth in employment of 1.6%, with the majority of growth coming in the latter part of the year. By the end of 2011, employment in California will be growing faster than the U.S. Unemployment growth is expected to speed up in 2012 as the recovery takes hold and real personal income growth is forecast to be 1.6% in 2011 and 3.6% in 2012.

In a report titled "Waiting to Send Out the Ships," Economist Julia Thornton Snider writes, "the near-term forecast for Los Angeles is of continued weakness in the fourth quarter, followed by a gradual reinvigoration of the recovery. Unemployment will stay high through the end of this year before gradually descending in early 2011." Snider writes that real personal income and real taxable sales have sputtered along with the rest of the economy, but should also improve next year, hitting 1.9 and 1.4 percent growth rates, respectively. For 2012, an acceleration of the recovery is forecasted as job gains spread from sector to sector and nonresidential construction revives.

About UCLA Anderson ForecastUCLA Anderson Forecast is one of the most widely watched and often-cited economic outlooks for California and the nation and was unique in predicting both the seriousness of the early-1990s downturn in California and the strength of the state's rebound since 1993. More recently, the Forecast was credited as the first major U.S. economic forecasting group to declare the recession of 2001. Visit UCLA Anderson Forecast on the Web at http://uclaforecast.com.

About UCLA Anderson School of ManagementUCLA Anderson School of Management, established in 1935, is regarded among the very best business schools in the world. UCLA Anderson faculty are ranked #1 in "intellectual capital" by BusinessWeek and are renowned for their teaching excellence and research in advancing management thinking. Each year, UCLA Anderson provides management education to more than 1,600 students enrolled in MBA, Executive MBA, Fully-Employed MBA and doctoral programs, and to more than 2,000 professional managers through executive education programs. Combining highly selective admissions, varied and innovative learning programs, and a world-wide network of 35,000 alumni, UCLA Anderson develops and prepares global leaders.